Josh Allen’s Tuesday limitations are procedural, not panic-worthy—his own “I feel good” stamp and playoff track record signal he’ll be unleashed Saturday against a Broncos defense still haunted by last year’s 31-7 Buffalo beatdown.
Buffalo’s Tuesday injury report read like a medical scroll: Josh Allen—foot, knee, right finger. Coaches slapped a “limited” tag on their franchise quarterback, instantly lighting up group chats from Orchard Park to Red Rocks. But the 28-year-old superstar shut the speculation down in real time, telling reporters “I feel good” as the Bills prep for a divisional-round showdown with the Denver Broncos.
Why the Limitation Is Routine, Not Red-Flag
All-season-long film shows Allen treating hits like speed bumps—he’s rushed 12 times inside the red zone since November, scoring six touchdowns with a steam-roller style that invites contact. Tuesday’s abbreviated reps are classic January load-management: preserve the rocket-launcher arm, let the hairline finger soreness calm, and keep the knee from swelling in Denver’s mile-high air. Head coach Sean McDermott has done this dance before—last January he limited Allen’s practice snaps before the MVP winner torched Kansas City for 351 yards in the AFC Championship.
Numbers That Quiet the Noise
- Allen has started 73 straight games, the NFL’s second-longest active streak among quarterbacks.
- Since Week 12 he’s averaging 289 total yards per outing with 14 total TDs and only 2 giveaways.
- Buffalo’s offense scores on 51 percent of Allen’s red-zone drives, best in the AFC.
Translation: the body endures, the production skyrockets.
Denver’s Déjà Vu Dilemma
The Broncos enter as the AFC’s No. 2 seed, but their path runs straight through last year’s nightmare. In that wild-card stampede Allen completed 78 percent of his throws, posted a 148.2 passer rating and scrambled for 74 yards. Denver’s edge rushers Nik Bonitto and Jonathon Cooper must collapse the pocket before Allen’s 6-foot-5, 237-pound frame decides to become a freight train—something the Jacksonville front seven couldn’t do on 33 rushing yards last Saturday.
Playoff Buffalo Without Allen? Fiction.
Backup Mitch Trubisky hasn’t taken a meaningful snap since October, and offensive coordinator Joe Brady’s playbook is built on Allen’s off-script sorcery. From deep-post lasers to Dalton Kincaid to back-shoulder fades for Khalil Shakir, the scheme disintegrates without No. 17’s bazooka. Vegas reflected that reality instantly: the line stayed parked at Buffalo +3½ after the limitation news, a signal the market trusts Allen’s availability more than any MRI.
What Saturday Really Hinges On
- Mile-High Stamina: Denver’s altitude dehydrates unconditioned lungs; Allen’s cardio has been tracked all week with extra hydration protocols.
- Third-Down Bullets: Buffalo leads the NFL converting 49.1 percent on third-and-medium—Allen’s finger must grip the laces cleanly on those 15-yard lasers.
- Quarterback Spy: Expect Alex Singleton to shadow Allen’s rush lanes; if the QB’s knee fires without swelling, he’ll outrun the spy and flip field position.
Bottom line: the “limited” tag is January theater—Allen’s pain threshold, playoff résumé, and the franchise’s first back-to-back AFC title game bid since the Super-Bowl-run 90s all point to the same 4:30 p.m. MT kickoff with No. 17 under center and Denver’s defense holding its breath.
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